interview of david morehouse
The BFG by roald dahl
Love is Forever maria popova
fromDoc T "Lost Secrets of Reading The Body WITHOUT Being Psychic!"
Short-cuts to finding the area of depleted or overcharged energies.
More history and original founders, on Muscle-Testing. Enjoy! JML
What Are Indicator Muscles?
Indicator muscles are skeletal muscles that are used during a manual muscle test to indicate disturbance in the flow of Chi. The technique of manual muscle testing has been practised since the turn of the 20th century.
The first description of this method was published in 1916 by Lovett and Martin, who worked with children suffering cerebralpalsy.
In 1949 Kendall and Kendall published the first book about the principles of manual muscle testing.
Here they documented muscle testing positions of functional significance for isolating weaknesses in specific muscles.
Today, many health practitioners in the fields of muscular skeletal medicine use manual muscle tests in their clinical assessment.
A distinction is made between isotonic and isometric tests conveying whether a muscle action elicited a joint movement (isotonic) or not (isometric).
In the 1960s George Goodhardt, a Chiropractor from the US, observed that
during an isometric manual muscle test a muscle would sometimes test weak, and in a subsequent test would regain its normal strength.
during an isometric manual muscle test a muscle would sometimes test weak, and in a subsequent test would regain its normal strength.
This transient loss of isometric muscle strength was interpreted as a functional condition, that indicated a much more subtle aspect of the loss of neuromuscular integrity, than was detectable using the usual isometric and isotonic tests of muscle power.
Many of the initial chiropractors who first took interest in Goodheart’s discovery, contributed to the research into indicator muscles in the last forty years.
John Thie DC, is remembered for having brought the discovery to a wider audience. In 1973 he published the ‘ Touch For Health Manual’ which remains a bestseller in its 31st year of publication.
David Walther DC published the first “Synopsis of Applied Kinesiology”, in
which he assembled the teaching notes of the chiropractors trained by G. Goodheart, and organized them into a syllabus.
which he assembled the teaching notes of the chiropractors trained by G. Goodheart, and organized them into a syllabus.
John Diamond MD, Gordon Stokes & Daniel Whiteside researched how indicator muscles can be used to restore emotional health.
Stokes & Whiteside, Gail & Paul Dennison, and Carl Ferreri pioneered the
kinesiological treatment of dyslexia and learning difficulties.
kinesiological treatment of dyslexia and learning difficulties.
The use of “finger modes” was introduced by the late Alan Beardall DC. In recent years Bruce Dewe MD and his wife Joan have compiled the most comprehensive database of kinesiology techniques under the finger mode system.
Subsequently, the isometric manual tests became known as “indicator muscle tests” because the transient weakness indicated some instability in other body systems.
The transient loss of neuromuscular integrity itself was referred to as “indicator muscle change”, because a stressful stimulus could make a prior
strong muscle change to a weak response."
strong muscle change to a weak response."
"...Dr. Beardall discovered a method to develop a dialogue with the patient’s
subconscious. It allowed the body to unwind the adaptive patterns to disclose the causal factors needing treatment.
subconscious. It allowed the body to unwind the adaptive patterns to disclose the causal factors needing treatment.
This method also reveals which techniques and protocols to use in which
order, what supportive therapies from other parts of the Triad of Health
were needed, when the various treatments were completed correctly, and when the session was complete.
order, what supportive therapies from other parts of the Triad of Health
were needed, when the various treatments were completed correctly, and when the session was complete.
This discovery was quite serendipitous. During a treatment session, Beardall had found a weak muscle and turned around to document his finding. When he retested for confirmation the muscle was strong without
any intervention.
any intervention.
While attempting to resolve how this could have happened, Beardall noticed that the patient had several fingers touching. Retesting with the hand opened resulted in the original weak muscle.
Fingers touching equaled strong muscle; hand open equaled weak muscle.
This simple serendipitous discovery led to the development of hundreds of mudras or hand modes and protocols to clarify and evaluate the body’s problems and optimum solutions."
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